I think it's worth providing some background on what's going on here, so I'll start there, but if you want to skip the background, go to post number [21] in this thread for a breakdown of what happened yesterday.
2/n
Background
Nachmanoff is the district judge assigned to this case.
Nachmanoff ordered that all Rule 16 discovery material be provided to the defense by Oct 13.
85k pages of discovery was eventually turned over, but not all of it because...
The filter team is needed for the review of the potentially privileged material that was acquired years ago during the Arctic Haze investigation.
That material includes communications between Daniel Richman (Person 3 from the indictment) and Comey at a time when Comey had retained Richman as counsel.
Making these communications protected under attorney-client privilege.
5/n
The material was reviewed years ago during Arctic Haze and Richman was involved, but Comey was not.
And that's the rub, or a rub, here.
Comey has never had the opportunity to assert his privilege over these communications, and it is his right to do so.
6/n
Oct 19
Before the defense had even responded to the motion for the filter team, prosecutors filed another motion seekign to expidite its implementation, urging the judge to hurry and order it.
It could be inculpatory or exculpatory. It could also reveal a conflict. with Comey's current counsel.
Defense responds, saying we haven't even replied to the first motion, which they have two weeks to do; the prosecutors haven't told us what exactly they want reviewed or what the legal basis is for the review; and we have reason to believe that members of the prosecution have already been exposed to the potentially privileged material.
Motions challenging a US attorney must be heard by an out-of-district judge; Senior Judge Currie from South Carolina is appointed to handle all matters related to Halligan's appointment.
Defense replies in opposition to the implementation of a filter protocol.
They don't necessarily oppose it ever being implemented, but they want to challenge the underlying search warrants first. There are four search warrants.
Additionally, they inform the court that they have reason to believe there has been a "privilege spill," and it may have tainted the grand jury process because the FBI agent exposed to the protected communications between Comey and Richman later testified to the grand jury as the only witness...
And was immediately pulled from the investigation into Comey by the FBI's legal counsel due to this exposure.
13/n
Oct 28
Judge Currie orders the prosecution to turn over to him all documents related to the Halligan's participation in the grand jury process plus transcripts.
Judge Nachmanoff appoints Magistrate Judge Fitzpatrick to preside over all proceedings related to the implementation filter team and the seized material from Arctic Haze.
Defense files a motion for disclosure of grand jury proceedings because there are numerous irregularities with it, including the possible privilege spill mentioned above.
Such irregularities, or worse, could be grounds for dismissal.
Nov 2
Prosecution responds to defense's opposition to the filter team.
The prosecution argues that the search warrants were lawful and that the potentially privileged materials are a small subset of evidence. Just five text threads between Comey and Richman.
The filing also gives a timeline of events associated with the search warrants, but it is redacted.
It also acknowledges that an FBI agent was exposed to the material, and he was pulled from the investigative team, and the material was separated from other evidence pending a review by a filter team.
19/n
Nov 4
Judge Currie issues another order for grand jury material because prosecutors had failed to provide him with all that he asked for.
Nov 5, a hearing occurs, and Magistrate Judge Fitzpatrick DENIES the prosecutors' motion for a filter team and ORDERS them to provide the Arctic Haze material at issue and the grand jury material to the Defense, plus descriptions and explanations of its handling.
This gov't is ordered to file a motion to unseal the four Arctic Haze search warrants.
They've been under seal since 2019/2020 in a different district.
24/n
Plus, he wants both sides to get together to work on a version of each document that is currently or potentially under seal on the docket and determine what should be redacted.
Prepping them to become public. : )
25/n
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The @USAO_SDFL "is recruiting prosecutors and restructuring its chain of command in preparation for a grand jury investigation expected to target former Justice Department officials and others involved in cases against President Donald Trump." 1/n
"The exact scope of the grand jury effort—which one of the individuals described as “special counsel oversight”—remains unclear."
‘A federal judge on Wednesday ordered prosecutors to turn over key evidence in the criminal case against former FBI Director James Comey, expressing concern that the [DOJ] may have “indicted first and investigated later.”
I have a thread on the motion seeking grand jury materials here
Today, DOJ defended the appointment of Lindsey Halligan as interim U.S. Attorney for EDVA.
In an order signed on Halloween, @AGPamBondi retroactively made Halligan a "Special Attorney, as of September 22, 2025" and gave her the "authority" to conduct legal proceedings in EDVA.
The order also says...
"[S]hould a court conclude that Ms. Halligan's authority as Special Attorney is limited to particular matters, I hereby delegate to Ms. Halligan authority as Special Attorney to conduct and supervise the prosecutions in United States v. Corney (Case No. 1:25-CR-00272) and United States v. James (Case No. 2:25-CR-00122)."
Halligan's appointment is the basis of motions to dismiss in both the James Comey and Letitia James criminal cases.
Judge Cameron McGowan Currie, a senior judge out of South Carolina who isn't assigned either the Comey or James case, is handling the matter.
The above exhibit is attached to the gov't's filing in opposition to the motions to dismiss in both cases.
Prosecutors in the criminal case against Fmr FBI Dir James Comey have filed a response to defense's opposition to implementing a filter team.
Prosecutors want that team to review privileged materials seized from Daniel Richman during the Arctic Haze media leak investigation.
The filing says that Comey has asserted privilege (atty-client) over five text threads of communications between him and Person 3 from the indictment, Daniel Richman, who was counsel to Comey at the time of the communications.
A filter team is the appropriate method of handling this issue.
The remaining evidence HAS ALREADY BEEN FILTERED and was provided by Richman.
The defense has argued in their opposition that, while they are not opposed to a filter team being used, they want to challenge the underlying search warrants first and also want prosecutors to be more specific about what exactly they are seeking to extract from the seized material.
Prosecutors repond here:
"The government is not asking to look at the raw returns from prior search warrants. The government is simply asking for a judicially approved filter protocol as to a small and specific subset of evidence that was lawfully obtained consistent with the terms of a federal search warrant."
Defense files motion seeking disclosure of grand jury transcripts and audio recordings.
"The record in this case raises a significant risk that irregularities in the grand jury process may have influenced the grand jury to return an indictment...
Those irregularities may create a basis for dismissing the indictment."
"Under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e)(3)(E)(ii), a court may order the disclosure of grand jury materials “at the request of a defendant who shows that a ground may exist to dismiss the indictment because of a matter that occurred before the grand jury.”"
In Washington D.C., “Everyone has interests with the Qataris.”
"Qatar [has invested] heavily in Western knowledge production and narrative control."
At $6.25bil, Qatar is top five in foreign contributions to academic institutions in the U.S., with sources in Burmuda, Canada, Germany, and Japan filling out the other four.
Think tanks and policymakers have taken in over $9.1mil since 2019.
Since 2016, Qatar has spent nearly $250 million on 88 FARA–registered lobbying and public relations firms, 33 of those were retained in a single year.